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Salmon: When Hedge Funds Go Online

NEW YORK (
Reuters Blogs) -- Many people are worried about the fact that the Securities and Exchange Commission has finally got around to
ending the ban on "general solicitation" by hedge funds. The
Reuters story alone features a host of unhappy characters: Heath Abshure, the president of the North American Securities Administrators Association; Democratic SEC commissioner Luis Aguilar; Senator Carl Levin; Barbara Roper, the investor protection director at the Consumer Federation of America. All of them have pretty much the same view: The job of the SEC is to protect consumers from being fleeced by cunning hedge funds, and now those cunning hedge funds will have more ability than ever to fleece the unsuspecting public.

But it seems to me that this is one of the least objectionable parts of the
JOBS Act, and in fact is likely to help individual investors much more than it hurts them. There is a downside, of course: if you have a million dollars to spare and are the kind of person who's easily persuaded by fast-talking snake-oil salesmen on the telly, then you might wind up writing an ill-advised big check. But then again, if you have a million dollars to spare and are the kind of person who's easily persuaded by fast-talking snake-oil salesmen, then you're probably on the speed-dial list of all manner of such people already -- selling not only hedge funds but even more hazardous instruments like penny stocks.

It may or may not turn out to be true that the hedge funds that advertise turn out to have lower returns than the ones which don't; right now, the
evidence is pretty thin. But as
Dan Primack wrote, the very lack of any kind of solicitation is already being used as a kind of reverse-psychology marketing exercise: It confers an aura of exclusivity. If you're not convinced how powerful that aura can be, just ask Bernie Madoff.

Which is exactly why the general-solicitation ban was such a bad idea: It worked against the kind of transparency which ultimately works to the benefit of all investors. Markets are good because they're transparent, and make prices public. Sites like
Yahoo! Finance are good because they extend that transparency to mutual funds, making apples-to-apples comparisons very easy. The opaque 2-and-20 crowd, on the other hand, is worrisome in large part because managers are enjoined from making simple public statements about what they're doing. Yes, hedgies are by their nature a pretty secretive bunch. But in large part that's because their compliance officers tell them they have to be.

The result is that there's no easy way to get basic data on any given fund, or fund manager -- its performance, its assets under management, that kind of thing. Instead, there's a shadowy universe of funds, investors and journalists, all passing around quarterly letters and performance information like so much samizdat.

Once this new rule comes into effect, all that changes. At that point, it will be entirely reasonable to expect all funds to have a simple Web site, featuring answers to the basic questions most investors want to know. No one's forcing them to put up such things, of course, but in a few months, failure to have a Web site will start looking like an affectation -- will look, indeed, as though the fund manager in question has something to hide.

The point is that while the term "general solicitation" is likely to call to mind overproduced television ads in the middle of golf tournaments, the much more important and interesting implications of last week's move are going to take place online. And the great strength of the Internet is that it privileges hard information over branding campaigns and the like.

We live in a world where if something isn't online, it may as well not exist. The first and often the last place that people research anything and everything is the internet: It's orders of magnitude more powerful and useful than any other database in the world. But when an individual is considering an investment in a hedge fund, the chances are that a
Google search will not serve them well at all. The result is that they have to start trusting humans instead -- their broker, who might be steering them into a particular "opportunity," or maybe someone representing the hedge fund directly. Either way, the individual is working from a position of weakness, passively receiving only the information that the sales person wants them to see.

Once funds start being able to put information online, however, all that is likely to change. If a broker phones me up and pitches me Hedge Fund A, for the first time I'm going to have the ability to see what alternatives are out there, and I'll be able to ask smart questions about why A rather than B or C or D. Alternatively, I might find no online presence for Hedge Fund A at all, which will start being something of a red flag.

What's more, we're living in a world where hedge funds are increasingly mistrusted; a bit of openness and transparency will help their cause a great deal. You still need to be an accredited investor to buy in to these vehicles, but anybody at all should be able to visit their sites, look at their numbers, see what they have to say about themselves, maybe even read their blogs and follow their tweets.

For me, that's the most exciting part of the new world: Compliance officers are no longer going to ban hedge-fund managers from joining in the conversation on
Twitter, under their own names. As a result, the quality of conversation on
Finance Twitter is bound to improve, and smart hedgies are going to realize that Twitter can become the perfect marketing platform for them. If I follow someone on Twitter who seems consistently smart and ahead of the market curve, that's going to be much more effective, in terms of getting me to invest with them, than any glossy marketing solicitation or television ad.

None of this is going to happen overnight. But if you concentrate on hedge-fund ads as opposed to their broader online presence, I think you're going to be missing the main effect of the SEC's action. The ads might get more media attention -- but it's the Web sites, and the Twitter accounts that are going to be much more important over the long term.

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